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The Music of the Reformation

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Martin Luther nailed his ninety-five theses (complaints about the Catholic ... singer and composer, and admired the music of Josquin des Prez ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Music of the Reformation


1
The Music of the Reformation
  • Martin Luther nailed his ninety-five theses
    (complaints about the Catholic Church) to a
    church door in Wittenberg, Germany, in 1517
  • The result was the Lutheran Church, the first
    Protestant denomination

2
Martin Luther
  • singer and composer, and admired the music of
    Josquin des Prez
  • believed in the ethical power of music and wanted
    the entire congregation to participate

3
The German Mass
  • Luther first published his German Mass in 1526
  • Simplified
  • Texts were in sometimes in German, and recitation
    formulas were adapted to the German language

4
The Lutheran Chorale
  • Strophic congregational hymn (chorale or
    Kirchenlied, church song)
  • Originally monophonic, for unison congregational
    singing
  • Often also arranged for four voice parts
  • Luther himself wrote many texts and some
    melodies, for example, the text of Ein' feste
    Burg ist unser Gott, 1529
  • contrafacta of secular songs
  • Luther's musical collaborator Johann Walter
    (14961570)

5
The Chorale Motet
  • Protestant
  • Polyphonic
  • German

6
Calvinist churches
  • Founded by Jean Calvin (15091564)
  • Prohibited the singing of texts not found in the
    Bible
  • Translated psalms into the vernacular and set
    them to metrical rhymes
  • Set the psalms to newly composed or borrowed
    melodies
  • 4 parts

7
The French Psalter
  • Psalter was published in 1562 for Calvinist
    churches
  • 4-part psalm settings

8
Bohemia
  • Jan Hus (13731415)
  • banishment of polyphony and instrumental music
  • Czech Brethren were later called the Moravian
    Brethren
  • Moravians emigrated to America, especially
    Pennsylvania, in the early eighteenth century

9
England in the Sixteenth Century
  • John Taverner (ca. 14901545)
  • greatest English musician of the early sixteenth
    century

10
Anglican Church Music
  • In 1534, the Church in England separated from the
    Roman Catholic Church
  • Henry VIII broke with the church for political
    reasons
  • At first there were no real changes to the
    liturgy
  • English rite
  • English instead of Latin
  • The English Book of Common Prayer

11
Service
  • Replaced the Mass
  • Anthem

12
Catholic Music at the End of the Sixteenth Century
  • The Counter-Reformation
  • The Council of Trent met from 1545 to 1563
  • Secular cantus firmi used as the basis for sacred
    works
  • Complex polyphony made it impossible to
    understand the words
  • Inappropriate behavior of church musicians
  • Inappropriate use of instruments

13
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525 or
15261594)
  • Educated and was a choirboy in Rome
  • Was choirmaster at the Cappella Giula at St.
    Peter's 155154
  • Sang in the pope's official chapel (Cappella
    Sistina)
  • choirmaster and teacher at influential churches
    in Rome

14
Palestrina and the Counter-Reformation
  • Supervised the revision of the official
    chantbooks to bring them in line with the Council
    of Trent's orders
  • A legend from the 1590s credits him with saving
    polyphony by composing a polyphonic Mass that
    incorporated Council of Trent Reforms, the Missa
    Papae Marcelli, published in 1567 (NAWM 47)

15
Missa Papae Marcelli, 1567 (NAWM 47)
  • Credo
  • No imitation, for the sake of brevity and clear
    diction
  • Uses a six-voice choir broken up into smaller
    groups
  • All six voices used together only at important
    words
  • Fauxbourdon-like passages
  • Rhythmic accents to help reduce monotony (e.g.,
    in "Et unum Dominum")

16
Missa Papae Marcelli, 1567 (NAWM 47)
  • Agnus Dei
  • Uses close imitation
  • Each voice puts accents at different places

17
Palestrinas music
  • mostly sacred
  • 104 Masses
  • 250 motets
  • 100 secular madrigals

18
Palestrina's style
  • usied all the techniques
  • cantus firmus
  • paraphrasing of a chant in all voice parts
  • canon
  • imitation

19
Palestrina's style
  • melodies move stepwise in an arched line
  • triadic harmony and very little chromaticism
  • Counterpoint follows Zarlino's rules (Le
    istitutioni harmoniche) closely
  • Dissonances introduced in suspensions and
    resolved on strong beats
  • Dissonances between beats allowed if the moving
    voice is doing so in a stepwise fashion
  • Downward leap of a third, from a dissonance to a
    consonance (later called cambiata), also
    allowable
  • natural rhythms of all the voices
  • Text is comprehensible

20
Spain
  • Tomás Luis de Victoria (15481611)

21
Tomás Luis de Victoria (15481611)
  • Studied in Rome, possibly with Palestrina
  • Worked at the Jesuit German College in Rome
    157177
  • In 1587, returned to Spain to work in the chapel
    of the Empress Maria

22
NAWM 48a, motet O magnum mysterium
  • Text expresses the joy of the Christmas season
  • Fugal opening is in Palestrina's style but with
    larger leaps

23
Example NAWM 48b, Missa O magnum mysterium
  • Kyrie
  • Imitation Mass, which preserves the opening
    characteristics of the motet
  • To create a fugue with two subjects, Victoria
    creates a second theme based on the main theme
  • Freely invented material used for the Christe
    (typical of imitation Masses)
  • Triadic harmony, similar to Palestrina's style,
    but with more use of perfect consonances for
    cadences

24
Orlando di Lasso (15321594)
  • One of the greatest composers of sacred music in
    the late sixteenth century
  • Known for the high quality of his motets

25
NAWM 49, Tristis est anima mea
  • Published in the Magnus opus musicum (Great Work
    of Music), a collection of Orlandos motets

26
NAWM 49, Tristis est anima mea
  • Pictorial representations of the text, similar to
    madrigalist word-painting
  • Phrases divided to reflect changes in meaning in
    the text
  • Descending semitone representing sadness
    ("tristis")
  • Circular melodic figure for the words
    "circumdabit me" (will encircle me)
  • "vos fugam capietis" (you will take flight)
    represented with fugal subject that is repeated
    eleven times to represent the eleven disciples
    who ran away while Jesus was being beaten
  • Note-against-note texture for important text, "et
    ego vadam immolari pro vobis" ("and I shall go to
    be sacrificed for you")

27
William Byrd (15431623)
  • Byrd was the last of the great Catholic Church
    composers of the sixteenth century
  • Catholic all his life but worked for the royal
    family during both Catholic and Protestant
    periods
  • He composed a few very fine Masses and many
    motets
  • His Gradualia, two books of motets (1605, 1607),
    were published for Catholics who worshiped
    secretly after the official break with the
    Catholic church
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